Kirklees' population expanded between the last two censuses. At the same time there were changes in ethnicity, religion and housing tenure.
The population passed 420,000
Between the last two censuses, the population of Kirklees increased by 8.7%, from almost 389,000 to 422,000.
The addition of almost 34,000 people means this area's population increased at a similar rate to the overall population of England (up 7.9% since the 2001 census).
In 2011, Kirklees was home to, on average, 7.4 people per football pitch-sized piece of land.
Population density was higher than the average across Yorkshire and The Humber
Population density (usual residents per football pitch-sized piece of land) across Yorkshire and The Humber, March 2011 (larger dots represent greater increase since 2001)
- Rest of Yorkshire and The Humber
- Kirklees
- Average across England
An older Kirklees
Census 2011 data also show a change in the local population's average age.
Between the last two censuses, the median age of Kirklees increased by two years, from 36 to 38 years.
This multi-cultural area had a slightly lower average age than Yorkshire and The Humber and remained slightly younger than the average local authority area across England (39 years of age).
The fall in age was because of an increase of just under 12,000 people between the ages of 60 and 69 years, while the population between 30 and 39 years decreased by just over 4,000.
About 11% of people in Kirklees are aged between 60 and 69 years
Percentage of usual residents in England, Yorkshire and The Humber and Kirklees by 10 year age band, March 2001 and March 2011
- 2001
- 2011
Ethnicity in Kirklees
The number of people in Kirklees from the Asian or Asian British ethnic groups increased from about 45,000 in 2001 to about 68,000 in 2011. This represents a change from 12% to 16% of the local population.
The percentage increased by more than the average across Yorkshire and The Humber (from 4.7% to 7.3%) and the average across England (from 5.2% to 8.0%).
The number of people in Kirklees from the White ethnic groups remained close to 330,000 between the last two censuses (from 86% to 79% of the population). The number of residents from Mixed/multiple ethnic groups (White and Asian, White and Black African, White and Black Caribbean or Other Mixed) increased from about 5,400 to just under 9,800 (from 1.4% to 2.3%).
About 7,900 people (1.4%) said they were from the Black, Black British, Caribbean or African ethnic groups, up from about 5,200 in 2001 (1.9%).
The population from the Asian or Asian British ethnic groups in Kirklees increased by 4.5 percentage points
Percentage of usual residents in England, Yorkshire and The Humber and Kirklees by ethnicity, March 2001 and March 2011
- 2001
- 2011
Religion in Kirklees
The number of people in Kirklees that described themselves as Muslim increased from just over 39,000 in 2001 to just over 61,000 in 2011. This represents a change from 10% to 15% of the local population.
The percentage increased by more than the average across Yorkshire and The Humber (from 3.8% to 6.2%) and the average across England (from 3.2% to 5.2%).
The number of people in Kirklees that described themselves as Christian decreased from about 260,000 in 2001 to about 230,000 in 2011 (from 67% to 53%). The number of people who described themselves as having no religion increased from just over 54,000 to about 100,000 (from 14% to 24%).
About 27,000 people (7.3%) did not state their religion, down from just over 28,000 in 2001 (6.5%).
The population who identified as Muslim in Kirklees increased by 4.4 percentage points
Percentage of usual residents in England, Yorkshire and The Humber and Kirklees by religion, March 2001 and March 2011
- 2001
- 2011
More people worked short hours
The percentage of employed people in Kirklees working less than 16 hours increased from 1.8% to 3.3% in the decade leading up to the most recent census.
In 2011, just under 1 in 11 (8.8%) people aged 16 to 74 (in employment the week before the Census 2011) said they had worked over 49 hours the week before completing the census, compared with 12% in 2001.
The proportion of people working less than 16 hours in a week increased at a similar rate to the figure for the whole of Yorkshire and The Humber (from 1.8% in 2001 to 3.0% in 2011). Across England, the percentage increased from 1.9% to 3.1%.
The proportion of people working less than 16 hours in a week in Kirklees increased by 1.5 percentage points
Percentage of usual residents aged 16 to 74 (in employment the week before the Census 2011) in Kirklees, Yorkshire and The Humber and England that said they had worked less than 16 hours the week before completing the census, March 2001 and March 2011
- 2001
- 2011
Living alone in Kirklees
The percentage of one-person households changed very little in Kirklees, while the proportion increased in Calderdale (the local authority area that shares the largest boundary with Kirklees).
In Kirklees, the proportion of one-person households stayed close to 30% between the last two censuses. During the same period, the proportion in nearby Calderdale increased from 30% to 33%.
Across Yorkshire and The Humber, the share of one-person households increased from 30% to 31%.
The percentage of households with a cohabiting couple in Kirklees increased from 8.6% to 10%, while the percentage of households with a married couple decreased from 38% to 35%.
The percentage of households with only one person was lower than across Yorkshire and The Humber
Percentage of households that comprised only one person across local authority areas in Yorkshire and The Humber and the average across England, March 2011
- Rest of Yorkshire and The Humber
- Kirklees
- Average across England
Area report data
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